Tag Archives: diane nelson

Around the Tubes

Venom #20

It’s Thanksgiving at GP HQ but we’re still bringing you a day of news! We wish everyone celebrating a great day.

The Beat – A Year of Free Comics: Cupido invites you to cozy up with a cup of tea for some seriously sweet soulmate content – Free comics!

Newsarama – Former Marvel CCO Joe Quesada’s New Title Confirmed – Congrats to him.

Newsarama – Marvel Promotes Steve Wacker to Head of Content, New Media – Lots of titles changes at Marvel apparently.

Newsarama – Former DC President Diane Nelson Exits Quibi – Interesting and not a good sign.

Reviews

Newsarama – John Constantine: Hellblazer #1
The Beat – Killadelphia #1
The Beat – Revenger
The Beat – Sentient
Newsarama – Tales of the Dark Multiverse: Infinite Crisis #1
Newsarama – Venom #20

Around the Tubes

Lots on tap for this week as we prepare for Baltimore Comic Con and New York Comic Con. So, stay tuned and check back often!

While you wait, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web in our morning roundup.

Haaretz – How Jewish Comic Book Artists Led the Fight to Break the Silence on the Holocaust – Some good history.

Heroic Hollywood – New ‘Batman’ Comic Upsets Genital Rights Organization – For fucks sake.

Kyiv Post – Comic Con Ukraine gathers thousands of fans in Kyiv – This would be interesting to check out.

CBR – Former DC President Harassed Off Twitter by Angry Zack Snyder Fans – Take some advice and let it go.

 

Review

Talking Comics – Return of Wolverine #1

Diane Nelson Exits as President of DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Consumer Products

Diane Nelson took a leave of absence in April for family reasons from Warner Bros. and now that is permanent as she has exited her roles as President of DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Consumer Products.

Nelson said in the announcement:

Warner Bros. has been my home for over 20 years with a wide variety of incredible professional experiences. The last nine–rebuilding and managing DC Entertainment–have been a particular highlight and privilege. With the support and talents of our staff and creators, I am proud to leave DC even stronger than when I joined it. I will miss everyone—particularly my executive management team—without whom none of our achievements could have been realized. And I am excited to take on my next professional adventure.

Nelson took over in her role in 2009 and spearheaded the development of the DC Universe of movies and television shows. Before her current roles, Nelson served as president and chief content officer of Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment.

The DC executive team of Dan DiDio, Jim Lee, Geoff Johns and Amit Desai will answer to Warner Bros’ chief digital officer and EVP Strategy and Business Development Thomas Gewecke. Pam Lifford is now the president of Warner Bros Consumer Products.

Around the Tubes

It’s new comic book day tomorrow. What’s everyone excited for? Sound off in the comments below! While you think about that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web in our morning roundup.

Lithub – On Writing the Comics – and Queer Characters – We Need – This sounds like an awesome conversation between Neil Gaiman and N.K. Jemisin.

CBR – Cloak & Dagger Showrunner Wants Crossover With Runaways – This would be really cool.

The Hollywood Reporter – DC Entertainment President Diane Nelson Taking Leave of Absence – Best to her and good luck to those involved.

 

Reviews

Newsarama – Iron Fist #78

Talking Comics – Nightwing #41

Parenting DC Comics, and A Rebirth of Ethics

The following is guest commentary by Joseph Phillip Illidge

DC-Comics-logoby Joseph Phillip Illidge

On Wednesday, April 20th, DC Comics announced that Shelly Bond, VP-Executive Editor of its Vertigo division and imprint, had left the company.

You know, “left”.

Additionally, the position of VP-Executive Editor, Vertigo, was being eliminated.

You know, like it never existed. An antimatter wave come from across the multiverse of corporate speak to fill a vacuum by removing the vacuum.

In addition to that megaton bomb being dropped on the comic book industry, the “elimination” of a high-ranking position held by a woman was commented on by two men. Dan Didio and Jim Lee, the Co-Publishers of DC Comics.

The Twitterscape, at the very least, was full of pointed and heated conversation as a result of this announcement.

Three people I know in the industry sent me texts. The texts (mature content warning) read as follows:

“What the hell is DC doing?”

“…DC shredding Vertigo and eliminating Shelly Bond’s job is one of the dumbest moves they could make.”

“It’s like DC enjoys doing dumb shit”

All interesting questions or observations.

The removal of a powerful woman from the corporate structure of DC Comics opened the floodgates for a history of injustices done to women by DC Comics, significantly because of alleged and documented sexual harassment of women by Eddie Berganza, Group Editor.

So much has been said about the latter in the last week, much less handful of years, that I doubt I could add anything more.

What’s I’d like to discuss is this thing that happens, when I bring up DC Comics’ problems concerning its female employees in public and in private.

DC-Super-Hero-Girls-Diane-NelsonPeople throw out Diane Nelson’s name.

Throw it out like a baseball, or a panacea.

Diane Nelson is the President of DC Entertainment, a position she’s held since 2009.

DC Comics is a subsidiary of DC Entertainment.

DC Entertainment encompasses DC Comics.

The two are not the same. One is larger than the other. One commands the other.

None of the people whom have presented Diane Nelson’s name to me have offered proof that Diane Nelson runs the day-to-day operations of DC Comics.

I don’t think she does.

I think she has much bigger fish to fry and a considerably larger and higher-stakes palette of responsibilities than day-to-day management and oversight of the publishing arm.

Said arm being run by three men.

DC_EntertainmentSo DC Entertainment is like the parent of a child old enough to be afforded a good deal of autonomy, but still living in the corporate house.

Diane Nelson, a female President of DC Entertainment, does not seem to have any impact whatsoever as to how women are treated, on a corporate and, or human, level at DC Comics.

Women whom have served at DC Comics for at least two decades are given their walking papers, and other women have their creative job opportunities hampered by the continued employment of a controversial officer of the company.

So please spare us the Diane Nelson excuse. She’s a businesswoman of a higher order dealing with billion-dollar-scale matters.

She is not the parent in the equation. Apparently and unfortunately, DC Comics has no moral compass.

So we must serve that role.

The community of supporters and consumers, who believe that the providers of heroic mythology should operate within an environment of heroic ideals, who believe that the need for profit does not outweigh or negate the need for equity of treatment for everyone, who believe that good employees and creators should not have to deal with the conflict of working in the belly of a beast so they can make a living, raise their families, and provide stories that define a better world.

I have boycotted DC Comics before, but I will not do so now.

I know that heroes operate within their halls. People of bright spirits and the best of intentions write, draw, and utilize their artistic gifts to contribute to a mythology that has finally found global respect and greater impact along with its global visibility.

You and I, if we want a better comic book industry, can be the moral compass for this damaged company.

WONDER-WOMAN-SENSATION-04_612x380_0We can be their Superman, in our optimism and unwavering hope that they can be better, in our capacity to not punish creators for the actions of their employer.

We can be their Wonder Woman, in our considered judgment of their injustices and crimes against people across gender and ethnic lines.

We can be their Batman, in our capacity for decisive action which will be tantamount to punishment.

Our industry is diminished when men of power allow for crimes against women to continue, alongside the removal of women of power.

Let’s get them to do better, because honestly, when the publisher of Wonder Woman, arguably one of the most powerful icons associated with feminism and female empowerment for the last and present century, is the home to despicable actions against women, something is fundamentally wrong and ugly and sick.

The criticism and admonishment must continue.


Joseph Illidge Photo by Milo Stone

Joseph Illidge
Photo by Milo Stone

Joseph Phillip Illidge is a public speaker on the subjects of race, comics and the corporate politics of diversity. In addition to his coverage by The New York Times, CNN Money, the BBC and Publishers Weekly, Joseph has been a speaker at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Digital Book World’s forum, Digitize Your Career: Marketing and Editing 2.0, Skidmore College, The School of Visual Arts, Purdue University, on the panel “Diversity in Comics: Race, Ethnicity, Gender and Sexual Orientation in American Comic Books” and at the Soho Gallery for Digital Art in New York City.

Joseph is the Head Writer for Verge Entertainment. Verge has developed an extensive library of intellectual properties for live-action and animated television and film, video games, graphic novels and web-based entertainment.

His graphic novel project, “The Ren,” about the romance between a young musician from the South and a Harlem-born dancer in 1925, set against the backdrop of a crime war, will be published by First Second Books, a division of Macmillan.

Joseph’s newest comic book project is the upcoming Scout Comics miniseries “Solarman,” a revamp of a teenage superhero originally written by Stan Lee.

Around the Tubes

It’s new comic book day tomorrow! What’s got everyone excited this week?

We’ll have our picks in a few hours, but while you decide, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web to keep you entertained.

Around the Tubes

CBLDF – Neil Gaiman: “Freedom of speech is a hugely important thing.” – Yes it is.

CBR – The Mission: The Black Masculinity Triangle of “Virgil,” “Luke Cage” and “Cyborg” – AS always, Joe has a great read.

Comics Alliance – ‘Flash’ Season 2 Casts ‘Candyman’ Tony Todd as Mystery Big Bad ‘Zoom’ – Interesting casting.

Comics Beat – DC president Diane Nelson to head up WB Consumer Products – And let speculation begin.

 

Around the Tubes Reviews

CBR – Lumberjanes #17

Nothing But Comics – The Z Word

DC Shakes Up Leadership


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Rumors have been swirling about DC that some big announcement was coming.  Yesterday the damn wall came down with what was going on.  On the DC Source Blog news broke about the new Executive Team (of which you can read the press release below).

Jim Lee and Dan DiDio have been named Co-Publishers of DC Comics, and Geoff Johns will serve as Chief Creative Officer of DC Entertainment.  Additionally, John Rood has been named Executive Vice President, Sales, Marketing and Business Development, and Patrick Caldon will serve as Executive Vice President, Finance and Administration. Each of these executives will report directly to Diane Nelson who is the President of DC Entertainment.

Diane Nelson broke down about each more on the DC Source blog and gave a word or two about each of the people involved.  Each of the individuals also commented as well on the blog (is this a sign DC is taking new media and the internet seriously now?).

Jim Lee is one of the top artists and creators in the business. But he is also an astonishingly smart and experienced businessman. He has a calm, confident and reassuring leadership style that will be enormously valuable to every member of the DC Entertainment and DC Comics team. He is fully adept and experienced at building a publishing program on his own, and will partner with Dan in doing so, but he also brings an affinity and passion for digital that will help the DC Comics business move aggressively into the future.

Dan DiDio is one of the most passionate and energetic leaders I have ever seen. He cares deeply about these characters and stories, and equally about the people who bring them to life at and with DC Comics. He knows how to manage the day-in, day-out mechanics of the publishing program, with his own strong creative sense, and he has great experience from prior to DC in adapting stories for other platforms.

Geoff Johns has an unparalleled creative mind and a huge heart. He brings a level of enthusiasm, passion and optimism to every discussion I have with him that is so motivating. He will be instrumental in establishing the tone and culture of creative risk and business growth that we intend for DC Entertainment. And he will ensure the integrity of how we bring these characters and stories to fans across every entertainment platform.

John Rood is a long-time colleague and friend. I have been looking for a way to work with him again ever since we met during his first stint at Warner Bros. 10 years ago. John was smart and accomplished then, but he has built and grown his professional experience in his 10 years at ABC Family in a way that makes him uniquely qualified for the job I envisioned. John will be a passionate, innovative marketer of the DC Comics publishing program, while he helps us build DC Entertainment and its library with internal divisions across Time Warner and Warner Bros. He will treat our retail customers and our consumers like the superheroes they are. And we’re lucky to have him on this team.

Pat Caldon. What can I say about Pat that people don’t already know, particularly inside DC Comics? He is a rock. He is deeply knowledgeable and much more creatively passionate than he lets on. He cares about everyone and everything associated with DC and he will be an instrumental partner to all of us in building the company for the future.

Below is the full press release:

Jim Lee and Dan DiDio Named Co-Publishers DC Comics

Geoff Johns to Serve as Chief Creative Officer

John Rood Named EVP, Sales, Marketing and Business Development
Patrick Caldon Named EVP, Finance and Administration

(February 18, 2010 – New York, NY and Burbank, CA) DC Entertainment, founded in September 2009 to unleash the power of the DC Comics library of characters across all media platforms, has named its executive management team, including new co-publishers of DC Comics and a Chief Creative Officer, as well as heads of Sales/Marketing/Business Development and Finance/Administration. Diane Nelson, President, DC Entertainment, made the announcement today.

The new senior executive team includes Jim Lee and Dan DiDio, who have been named Co-Publishers of DC Comics, and Geoff Johns, who will serve as Chief Creative Officer of DC Entertainment. Additionally, John Rood has been named Executive Vice President, Sales, Marketing and Business Development, and Patrick Caldon will serve as Executive Vice President, Finance and Administration. Each of these executives will report directly to Nelson.

“DC Entertainment’s new executive team is a creative ‘dream team,’ with accomplishments and talent unrivaled in the business,” said Nelson. “This announcement continues and underscores DC’s legacy as the ultimate destination for creators. We’ll benefit enormously from the deep experience this team represents, while re-energizing the direction and focus of the company. I’m excited and honored to have each of them with me at the helm of DC Entertainment.”

“With this new leadership team, Diane will be able to fully and respectfully integrate DC’s brand and characters, not only as key content drivers in the film division, but across all of the businesses of Warner Bros. and Time Warner,” said Jeff Robinov, President, Warner Bros. Pictures Group. “I am very proud and excited about the accomplished executives who are charged with expanding this powerful library. They each have a diverse and complementary skill-set and are deeply committed to contributing to the DC Comics legacy.”

Prior to his current post, Lee served as Editorial Director, where he oversaw WildStorm Studios and was also the artist for many of DC Comics’ bestselling comic books and graphic novels, including “All Star Batman and Robin, The Boy Wonder,” “Batman: Hush” and “Superman: For Tomorrow.” He also serves as the Executive Creative Director for the upcoming DC Universe Online massively multiplayer action game from Sony Online Entertainment.
Lee is an award-winning comic book illustrator/creator/publisher who started his professional career at Marvel Comics where his work on the X-Men continues to hold the all-time sales record for single issue sales at eight million copies sold in one month. At Marvel, he also drew the Punisher and co-created many characters, the most popular being Gambit, featured in 2009’s “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” feature film. In 1992, he started his own production company, WildStorm Productions, and co-founded Image Comics, an independent comics company which quickly grew to become the number-three North American comics publisher. His most notable creations, “WildCats” and “Gen 13,” saw life beyond comic books as a CBS Saturday morning cartoon and as a direct-to-video animated movie distributed by Disney, respectively. In 1998, he left Image Comics and sold WildStorm to DC Comics.

DiDio most recently served as Senior Vice President and Executive Editor, DC Universe, overseeing the editorial department for the DC Universe imprint, including the ongoing adventures of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and scores of heroes and villains. He also worked to develop new titles with the industry’s premier writers and artists. At DC Comics, DiDio has spearheaded such bestselling projects as “All Star Batman and Robin, The Boy Wonder,” “Identity Crisis,” Green Lantern, Teen Titans and The Outsiders.

Before joining DC in 2002, DiDio was with Mainframe Entertainment, where he most recently served as Senior Vice President, Creative Affairs, overseeing the development, distribution, marketing and promotion of all Mainframe’s television properties. Prior to that, he served as Executive Director of Children’s Programming for ABC, where he was also a publicity manager, having started his television career at CBS, working in a variety of positions.
Johns builds on his current role at DC from being one of today’s most prolific, popular and award-winning contemporary comic book writers with this new executive role. He is a New York Times bestselling author who has written highly acclaimed stories revitalizing Green Lantern, Superman, the Flash, Teen Titans, and the Justice Society of America for DC Comics.

Johns began his comics career creating and writing “Stars and S.T.R.I.P.E.” for DC Comics while at the same time working with film director Richard Donner. After acclaimed runs on Flash, Teen Titans and the bestselling “Infinite Crisis” mini-series, Johns co-wrote a run on Action Comics with his mentor, Donner. Johns has also written and produced for various other media, including the acclaimed “Legion” and “Absolute Justice” episodes of Warner Bros. Television’s “Smallville” and Adult Swim’s “Robot Chicken” and “Titan Maximum.” He also wrote the story of the DC Universe Online massively multiplayer action game from Sony Online Entertainment.

Rood returns to Warner Bros. after 10 years with the Disney ABC Television Group, where he most recently was Senior Vice President of Marketing, ABC Family. While at ABC, he also consulted for ABC News during the recent transitions at “Good Morning America” and “ABC World News with Diane Sawyer.”

Prior to Disney, Rood worked for six years at Warner Bros. Consumer Products, negotiating promotional deals with national advertisers using Warner Bros.’ properties, including the DC Comics characters. He has also worked in promotions for Equity Marketing on the Burger King account and in advertising for Leo Burnett on the McDonald’s and Miller Brewing accounts.

Caldon most recently served as Executive Vice President, Finance and Operations of DC Comics and MAD Magazine. Before that, he served as Senior Vice President, Finance and Operations, and his other posts at DC include Vice President, Finance and Operations, and Controller, the position in which he joined the company in 1985. Prior to joining DC Comics, Caldon spent a decade at Warner Communications in corporate accounting and as Senior Vice President and CFO of the Cosmos soccer team (owned by Warner Communications at the time).
DC Entertainment, a division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, is charged with strategically integrating the DC Comics business, brand and characters deeply into Warner Bros. and all its content and distribution businesses. DC Entertainment utilizes the expertise the Studio has in building and sustaining franchises to prioritize the DC properties as key titles and growth drivers across all of the Studio, including feature films, television, interactive entertainment, direct-to-consumer platforms and consumer products. The DC Comics publishing business is the cornerstone of DC Entertainment, releasing approximately 90 comic books through its various imprints and 30 graphic novels a month as well as continuing to build on its creative leadership in the comic book industry.